25 AGs Ask U.S. Supreme Court to Stay New EPA Power Plant Rule

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The Bidenistas at the EPA attacked coal and gas-fired power plants in April, threatening to destabilize the existing electric power grid with new regulations (see EPA Rolls Out Final Regs Attacking Coal & Gas-Fired Power). Using 1,020 pages of new regulations, which will go into effect this year, all coal-fired plants that are slated to remain operational in the long term and all new gas-fired power plants will be required to control (capture) 90% of their carbon emissions using expensive and unproven technology. Translation: New gas-fired plants won’t get built, and most, if not all, coal plants will shutter, with the result that electricity will, by necessity, be rationed (see WSJ Calls Biden EPA Power Plant Regs a Plan to “Ration Electricity”). Twenty-five state Attornies General, led by West Virginia AG Patrick Morrisey, asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia to invalidate the EPA’s new finalized power plant regulation (see 25 States Led by WV Ask DC Circuit to Overturn EPA Power Plant Reg). The DC Circuit declined to do so, allowing the onerous rules to stand.

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